Nigerian CSOs set credibility threshold for 2019 elections
By OakTV
23 January 2019 |
1:00 pm
Nigerian CSOs set credibility threshold for 2019 elections.
In this article
Related
Related
7 Apr
The National Stadium, Surulere, which was once Nigeria's imperial beauty and was built in 1972 by General Yakubu Gowon, has become an abandoned relic as of April 2023.
13 Apr
Emmanuel Amunike is now available to coach the Super Eagles and I believe he's the best candidate available to coach the Super Eagles. You can find out why in this episode as well as get match predictions for the first leg of the Europa League Quarter-finals. Ayomide Sotubo and Itunu Azeez take a look at these topical issues on this episode of The Nutmeg.
22 Apr
Wailing sirens at 10 am local time saw Israel come to a standstill while Holocaust survivors led a march to remember victims of Nazi death camps.
26 Apr
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has warned about the consequences of minimal rainfall and intense heat that officially put Spain into long-term drought last month.
21 Apr
Dare can no longer claim ignorance towards the ruinous state of the National Stadium in Surulere, and neither are the financial numbers he's suggested for a possible renovation realistic. Something has to give because lives could have been lost in the area recently.
8 May
Habib Chaab was convicted of "corruption on earth" for allegedly heading a rebel group and carrying out bombings, including one in Khuzestan in 2018. Sweden derided Iran's "inhumane" decision to execute him.
18 May
Find these stories and much more when you grab a copy of The Guardian on Friday.
21 May
Inside Stuff with Martins Oloja this week examines the race to become the next Nigeria Senate President and Speaker House of Assembly. The multi-award-winning journalist with The Guardian Nigeria asks: 10th National Assembly: Who is on Nigeria's side?
14 Jun
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has unveiled the country's first national security strategy. The plan envisages more coherent foreign and security policies to prevent Berlin from being wrong-footed by geopolitical events.
15 Jun
Find these stories and much more when you grab a copy of The Guardian on Friday.
3 Jul
Living in FESTAC Town from its construction in 1977 until the early 1990s was the aspiration of many progressive families. Today, FESTAC Town is a mere shadow of its former glory, and the roads are in urgent need of repair.
21 Jul
Cheng Wing-chun is accused of replacing China's national anthem with a popular Hong Kong protest song in a YouTube video. A 2020 law in Hong Kong makes insulting the Chinese national anthem illegal.
Latest
1 hour ago
Grammy-winning artist Usher will headline the halftime show at the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas, Nevada, the National Football League (NFL), Apple Music and label Roc Nation announced on Sunday. The 58th Super Bowl is scheduled to take place at Las Vegas' Allegiant Stadium on Feb. 11, 2024.
1 hour ago
Philippines and Chinese vessels face off in the South China Sea, marking the latest in a series of confrontations over competing territorial claims in the important maritime passageway.
1 hour ago
The White House is warning of severe economic consequences if Congress fails to pass a funding bill by an October 1 deadline. Far-right House Republicans are demanding deep spending cuts that are almost certain to be rejected by the Democratic-controlled Senate. Also in this edition: France asks its energy firms to sell fuel at cost, and Germany looks to semiconductor production to revive its flagging industrial sector.
3 hours ago
A year ago, Giorgia Meloni's radical right-wing Brothers of Italy party was the biggest winner in Italian parliamentary elections. What has she achieved in her first year in office?
4 hours ago
The French president said military cooperation with the West African nation would end and France's soldiers stationed there would return home by the end of the year.
4 hours ago
The UN chief has called it an epidemic of coups. In Africa, since 2020, military officers have seized power, or attempted to do so, in numerous sub-Saharan countries. Just in the last two and a half months, soldiers in Gabon announced a takeover of power, while in Niger, members of the presidential guard detained President Mohamed Bazoum and announced that they were seizing power.